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Study grants for virgins 'illegal', says South African minister

By AFP
South Africa A cabinet minister slams as illegal a scholarship scheme for female students who must pass virginity tests during the holidays to receive grant money.  By Safin Hamed AFP
FEB 3, 2016 LISTEN
A cabinet minister slams as "illegal" a scholarship scheme for female students who must pass virginity tests during the holidays to receive grant money. By Safin Hamed (AFP)

Johannesburg (AFP) - A South African cabinet minister on Wednesday slammed as "illegal" a new scholarship scheme for female students who must pass virginity tests during the holidays to receive grant money.

Uthukela municipality near Durban city last month awarded "maidens' bursaries" to 16 university students on condition they remain virgins until they completed their studies.

Beneficiaries of the cash will be subjected to regular tests, traditionally conducted by elderly women.

Municipality mayor Dudu Mazibuko defended the grants as a way to curb sexually transmitted infections, including HIV, and unplanned teen pregnancies.

But Social Development Minister Bathabile Dlamini dismissed the tests as illegal, unhygienic and a violation of rights and said that the scheme would not work.

"These arguments are, at best, misguided and inadvertently provide a convenient screen for a patently harmful practice steeped in patriarchal practices that serve to oppress women," she wrote in the Daily Maverick news website.

"Girls under the age of 18 cannot be subjected to virginity testing. It is against the law," she said, adding that women aged 18 or more must give "informed" consent before being tested.

Any consent can "not include coercion through making access to resources to study a condition for that support."

The amount of money available through the grants has not been revealed.

The minister, who is also the chairwoman of the ruling African National Congress (ANC) women's league, described virginity testing as "ineffective, unhygienic and a gross violation of a girls' human rights."

"Many first sexual encounters are unwanted... Despite this there is a huge stigma attached to girls who 'fail' the virginity testing," she said, calling the grant scheme akin to a "sexual offense".

The South African Human Rights Commission told AFP it would collaborate with the Commission for Gender Equality to investigate the scholarships.

A SAHRC spokesman Isaac Mangena said it "has received several complaints" about the bursaries.

Mayor Mazibuko was not immediately available for comment on Wednesday.

About 6.8 million people live with HIV in South Africa, with a prevalence rate of 19 percent between those aged between 15 and 49.

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